ABSTRACT

The Dead Sea Scrolls, a collection of 972 documents discovered between 1946 and 1956, are of immeasurable religious and historical significance. They include the oldest known surviving copies of Biblical-era documents. The manuscripts shed considerable light on forms of Judaism never known before. These forms contain hints of Christianity, or as put elsewhere, it was the Judaism amid which Christ and his first followers lived, thought, and wrote. Edmund Wilson's book is a record of this great scholarly find. Wilson was a prolific literary critic and social commentator, not an academic, and therefore Israel and the Dead Sea Scrolls reads like a journalist's reportage. This unique personal account weaves together threads of folklore, history, and intrigue. As Leon Edel writes in his foreword, -Reading him, it is not difficult to imagine the ardor with which Edmund Wilson pursued his complex subject; it was the kind of subject he had always liked best, involving as it did history, politics, ancient lore, and all his faculties for imaginative reconstruction and historical analysis. . . . No book quite like this has been written in our century.- The scrolls of the Essenes, and the history of this Jewish sect's possible antecedence to Christianity, led the author to Israel and to the revelations contained in the scrolls. This book contains his resulting account of the scrolls' history. Originally published in 1978, this edition of Wilson's classic is made contemporary with a new introduction by Raphael Israeli, which illustrates the ongoing academic controversy surrounding the Dead Sea Scrolls.

part |108 pages

ISRAEL 1954

chapter I|40 pages

On First Reading Genesis

chapter II|66 pages

Eretz Yisrael

part |124 pages

The Dead Sea Scrolls 1947-1969

chapter |1 pages

The Scrolls From The Dead Sea 1955

chapter I|19 pages

The Metropolitan Samuel

chapter II|20 pages

The Essene Order

chapter III|13 pages

The Monastery

chapter IV|23 pages

The Teacher Of Righteousness

chapter V|36 pages

What Would Renan Have Said?

chapter VI|9 pages

General Yadin

part |98 pages

I955-I967

chapter I|16 pages

Polemics

chapter II|4 pages

The Genesis Apocryphon

chapter III|6 pages

The Psalms

chapter IV|9 pages

The Nahum Pesher

chapter V|8 pages

John Allegro

chapter VI|6 pages

The Copper Scrolls

chapter VII|6 pages

The Texts

chapter VIII|7 pages

The Testimonia

chapter IX|7 pages

The Epistle To The Hebrews

chapter X|17 pages

Masada

chapter XI|8 pages

Dubious Documents

part |72 pages

“On The Eve 1967”

chapter I|5 pages

Tattoo

chapter II|3 pages

Palestinians

chapter III|8 pages

The Two Jerusalems

chapter IV|5 pages

The New Israel National Museum

chapter V|12 pages

Conversations With Yadin And Flusser

chapter VI|4 pages

Departure

chapter |12 pages

The June War And The Temple Scroll

chapter |20 pages

General Reflections